X-Git-Url: http://git.chise.org/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=etc%2FTUTORIAL;h=64af47371b8f7b0c234a9a2d320743f5f220324d;hb=883675cc94f1a69be8018d58511320275e3b236a;hp=e6a3b3e8ebda13eb287e8de8202eefc12bdb7919;hpb=6883ee56ec887c2c48abe5b06b5e66aa74031910;p=chise%2Fxemacs-chise.git.1 diff --git a/etc/TUTORIAL b/etc/TUTORIAL index e6a3b3e..64af473 100644 --- a/etc/TUTORIAL +++ b/etc/TUTORIAL @@ -88,7 +88,7 @@ time, so it would be of great benefit if you learn them now. >> Move into the line with C-f's and then up with C-p's. See what C-p does when the cursor is in the middle of the line. -Each of text line ends with a Newline character, which serves to +Each line of text ends with a Newline character, which serves to separate it from the following line. The last line in your file ought to have a Newline at the end (but Emacs does not require it to have one). @@ -577,7 +577,7 @@ C-x C-f. This way you can get quite a number of files inside Emacs. Emacs stores each file's text inside an object called a "buffer." Finding a file makes a new buffer inside Emacs. To see a list of the -buffers that current exist in your Emacs job, type +buffers that currently exist in your Emacs job, type C-x C-b List buffers @@ -749,7 +749,7 @@ Emacs deletes its auto save file. If the computer crashes, you can recover your auto-saved editing by finding the file normally (the file you were editing, not the auto -save file) and then typing M-x recover file. When it asks for +save file) and then typing M-x recover-file. When it asks for confirmation, type yes to go ahead and recover the auto-save data.